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Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Getting to Know an Ancestral Cemetery

To genealogists, cemeteries are repositories of much more
than bodies. In fact, cemeteries may hold information on tombstones and in
sexton records (if we’re really lucky) that gives us parents’ names and dates
of birth and death or other details on those buried there.

To get the most out of a trip to an ancestral cemetery, one
needs a little bit of “cemetery savvy” which I described in a posting of Feb22, 2012. I covered points such as at-home preparation through studying
websites and calling the cemetery or sexton’s office for information. This
communication may help you learn a lot about exactly where your ancestor is
buried and if there are any burial cards available to tell who bought the grave
lot. Also in that posting, I linked to a website which gives instructions on
the do’s and don’ts of tombstone cleaning.

Before I came to Chicago on my September 2012 research trip,
I had found a map of Calvary Cemetery online, and I had talked a few times with
both members of the staff, John F. Geary and Thomas J. Berry. I called before I
left to let them know I was coming.

Also I was fortunate to have met Craig Pfannkuche, a genealogist steeped in Chicago history,
through the Newberry Library’s listing of Chicago area researchers.
Craig had done some on-the-ground research for me in Chicago records a few
years ago. Now it was my opportunity to meet him in person. As a true lover of
Chicago and its rich past, Craig offered to be my guide to Calvary and any
other place in the city.

Photo taken by Bert Schuster 9/24/2012

Well, the big day finally came. I was so excited to be
standing in front of the Calvary Cemetery Office, wearing my backpack filled
with tombstone cleaning supplies. So many times I had pictured
myself right here, at the edge of the cemetery, ready to find the grave of
Patrick William Kearney, the
brother of my great grandmother, Mary Kearney Kries Lauer.

Photo taken by Pat Spears 9/24/2012

Photo courtesy of Calvary Cemetery

Our first step was to say hello to Tom Berry who
was on duty the morning of our visit. He directed Craig, my husband Bert, and me
to the kiosk which houses a computer database that gives
grave location information. All you have to do is key in your
ancestor’s name, and a cemetery map comes up with a diagram of the grave
location for this person. I put in the name of Patrick William Kearney and printed
out the map. Then we headed to Section H, Block 25, Lot 191.

Photo taken by Bert Schuster 9/24/2012

I knew there was no marker for Patrick’s grave as Tom Berry
had told me that it was a charity grave. Luckily Craig was with me or I would
not have been able to locate the block or the lot. He has quite a bit of
cemetery sleuthing experience. Using the larger cemetery map and an enlarged

image of Section H, Craig was able to identify Block 25, Lot 191. For the first
time in 133 years, someone had come to honor the memory of two-year old Patrick
William Kearney.

Patrick William Kearney gravesite, Calvary Cemetery

Only after I left
Chicago and returned home did I realize that I wanted to check into putting a
monument on Patrick’s grave. More about this in a future posting.

Our next stop was to visit the grave site of the Sweeney/Brookins/Dinan
family, a collateral group in the Kearney/Carney network of friends, associates and
neighbors. It took a little longer to find the family plot as there were so
many tombstones in Section U, Lot S18. Unfortunately there was only one marker
for this group of eleven family members.

This
marker was barely visible under the grass that had grown over it and the hard
clumps of dirt that clung to the grass. And here is where I learned that I
needed to bring yet another tool to the cemetery:

Craig was on his knees, busily pulling aside grass and
brushing dirt away so that we could more easily read the marker.

Photo taken by Bert Schuster 9/24/2012

At last, we
could make out the inscription: Ida M. Schuerman and Walter C. Schuerman.

Photo taken by Bert Schuster 9/24/2012

I believe that Ida was the granddaughter of Catherine
Sweeney Brookins Dinan. Catherine was one of the baptismal sponsors, along with
her son Charles Dinan, for my great grandmother’s first child, Henrietta Kreis.

And so ended our day at the cemetery. We had talked first with the staff

Photo taken by Pat Spears 9/24/2012

of the
cemetery who had given me much information over the years before my visit. We
had printed out maps from a new technology
-- the kiosk -- available at Chicago Catholic cemeteries. Using the
maps, we had found one unmarked grave for an ancestor and a marked grave for a
collateral family member. And best of all, I had reaped the benefits of having
a local person, Craig, show us around the cemetery.

About Me

My first ten years were spent in Chicago, IL and the next ten in Tucson, Arizona. In 1967, I graduated from the University of Arizona with a degree in secondary education. I taught English in San Francisco public schools for twenty four years. Then I re-invented myself as a grants manager and held a variety of positions in local and state governmental agencies, colleges and universities in California and North Carolina. In 2003 I completed a Master's degree in Public Administration at San Francisco State University. Now I am retired and doing genealogy full time.